161
161
Apr 23, 2012
04/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 161
favorite 0
quote 0
at the end we have anna sklar, she has written the book "brown acres, a.m. an intimate history of the los angeles sewers" and tells the story of the often -- quite a colorful title -- tells the story of the often alarming history of how we dispose of our waste, and she tells the battles to come up with a clean, safe alternative to dumping our sewage in the ocean, which we did for many, many years, anna grew up in los angeles, she has a masters in history from ucla, worked in various city agencies, including the department of public works, has been a reporter for npr and kcet, contributed to "the los angeles times" and other publications. welcome, anna. >> thank you. glad to be here. >> and next to anna is kendra pierre-louis. she has written: "green washed why we can't buy our way to a green planet" and details we cannot buy our way into sustainable it by buying a prius, and wearing ore gappic shirts but it isn't doing much to help the environment. kendra is the sustainable development editorror just means.com. has a masters agree in sustainability developme
at the end we have anna sklar, she has written the book "brown acres, a.m. an intimate history of the los angeles sewers" and tells the story of the often -- quite a colorful title -- tells the story of the often alarming history of how we dispose of our waste, and she tells the battles to come up with a clean, safe alternative to dumping our sewage in the ocean, which we did for many, many years, anna grew up in los angeles, she has a masters in history from ucla, worked in various...
140
140
Aug 12, 2012
08/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 140
favorite 0
quote 0
[laughter] with piercing brown eyes the olive skin and irrepressible sense of confidence. most were sharecroppers and former slaves and had rejoiced when slavery ended but it was light green grass seared by the summer sun. he may have remembered his grandfather who kept to medicare fall distance. dolphus was born a slave to the enslaved teen-age girl and the man who is a tendency he may never have known. >> he moved to birmingham alabama in 1880? >> looking at fueling the profits from the automobile industry. and the pulitzer prize-winning book there was an awful history about the time dolphus shows up but what is he able to do that challenge says about this period? >> it was not segregated early on we think of it as iconic but dolphus had white neighbors. someone who wanted to make his mark. he buys property. >> another property owner. [laughter] and you find him. >> host: yen to with dead distant relatives but those who you interviewed and also melvenia. tell us how you were able to write about her life. >> to find people who'd new melvenia. of woman born into slavery i
[laughter] with piercing brown eyes the olive skin and irrepressible sense of confidence. most were sharecroppers and former slaves and had rejoiced when slavery ended but it was light green grass seared by the summer sun. he may have remembered his grandfather who kept to medicare fall distance. dolphus was born a slave to the enslaved teen-age girl and the man who is a tendency he may never have known. >> he moved to birmingham alabama in 1880? >> looking at fueling the profits...
118
118
Oct 21, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 118
favorite 0
quote 0
lead authors of the 1956 southern manifest tow which is the protest of the supreme court decision in a brown v board of education decision in 1954. he is the record holder to the day of the longest one man filibuster. in the begin necessary book of world words 24 hours and 18 minutes he spoke against the 1957 civil rights bill. we remember him as one of the last jim crow demagogue. he was that. what we forget about thurmond. he was also one of the first of the sun belt conservative. what do i mean by that? what is that? the sun belt, it's one of the big stories, one of the major storiesed in the history of 20th century american politics. and that is the flow of jobs, of industries, resources and pop police station sphrt state of the midwest and the -- in the post world war ii period. they were recruiting in list i are. they were passing right to work laws. they eve ising lots of funding from the federal government to build military at the time when the united states was involved in the cold war against the soviet union. so states like mississippi, states like georgia, texas, arizona, and nor
lead authors of the 1956 southern manifest tow which is the protest of the supreme court decision in a brown v board of education decision in 1954. he is the record holder to the day of the longest one man filibuster. in the begin necessary book of world words 24 hours and 18 minutes he spoke against the 1957 civil rights bill. we remember him as one of the last jim crow demagogue. he was that. what we forget about thurmond. he was also one of the first of the sun belt conservative. what do i...
130
130
Sep 21, 2012
09/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 130
favorite 0
quote 0
senator brown voted against that and senator brown has said he will permit the taxes to rise for 90% of the families here in the commonwealth of massachusetts. 97% of small businesses, unless there are tax breaks for those at the very top. so here's how i see this. this is really about taking balanced approach. it's a serious problem and expect to get serious about it. if were not willing to do both, then it's just more of the same. more gridlock in washington in more danger for our economy and must evolve for for families. >> thank you, rebuttal. >> we have a thing in massachusetts, an opportunity for people who want to pay their fair share and actually pay more than their fair share to check a box. professor warren was always taken as the first approach raising taxes, placing blame, raising taxes. she had an opportunity to check another box and i was to pay more in massachusetts income tax and she chose not to do that. it's usually the ones who are yelling the loudest about pain or, that being said with regard to oil companies, i'm no friend to big oil. on the fringe of. i'm not su
senator brown voted against that and senator brown has said he will permit the taxes to rise for 90% of the families here in the commonwealth of massachusetts. 97% of small businesses, unless there are tax breaks for those at the very top. so here's how i see this. this is really about taking balanced approach. it's a serious problem and expect to get serious about it. if were not willing to do both, then it's just more of the same. more gridlock in washington in more danger for our economy and...
171
171
Jul 22, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 171
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> piercing brown eyes and aqua line knows. an irrepressible sense of confidence. most of the family and friends for sharecroppers, former slaves, and the sandy red clay see how, they had rejoiced when slavery ended, but did with a thick spring grass here in the summer sun. he might have even remember the chatter about a man who at giving him fair skin and research eclipse, the captain of a careful distance, never claiming publicly. he had been born a slave to a teenage girl to a man he had never known. salinas to birmingham, alabama and what, 1880? that we think of birmingham, alabama today is the one hand, gleason, feeling u.s. steel and ultimately providing material for the mobile industry manufacturing industry in the 20th century history finance summit taking liberty with slavery by another name. the pulitzer prize-winning book of 2009. so birmingham has this really awful distribution that begins right around the time it also shows that. if else to for the civil rights struggle in 1963. but what is he able to do in birmingham and away the challenges that we th
. >> piercing brown eyes and aqua line knows. an irrepressible sense of confidence. most of the family and friends for sharecroppers, former slaves, and the sandy red clay see how, they had rejoiced when slavery ended, but did with a thick spring grass here in the summer sun. he might have even remember the chatter about a man who at giving him fair skin and research eclipse, the captain of a careful distance, never claiming publicly. he had been born a slave to a teenage girl to a man he...
139
139
Apr 8, 2012
04/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 139
favorite 0
quote 0
over the previous establishment candidate in the week in the massachusetts special election for scott brown who wanted it true that shocks the democratic party in my one-party state and by november 2010 the tea party was brought into the wave of massive gop victories at the national level in the state in helping to elect much more conservative republicans. we all know that they pushed many of those republicans to refuse confidantes with the administration throughout 2011, changes in direction and natural policies. and we see tea parties voters wayne and during the course of the 2012 primaries in no way i'll discuss at the end of our remarks. having reminded you of that huge phenomenon that changed the focus of national debate and create a lot of new energy in a formerly conjectured right, let me just mention how he got involved. vanessa was doing a term paper for robert putnam's social capital fund and noticed that it was on the right that a lot of protest energy was made around health care reform. i was finishing up a book on the first years of the obama presidency in 2010 and couldn't hel
over the previous establishment candidate in the week in the massachusetts special election for scott brown who wanted it true that shocks the democratic party in my one-party state and by november 2010 the tea party was brought into the wave of massive gop victories at the national level in the state in helping to elect much more conservative republicans. we all know that they pushed many of those republicans to refuse confidantes with the administration throughout 2011, changes in direction...
152
152
Oct 7, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 152
favorite 0
quote 0
louis browns. and they gave bush entrÉe into his own texas rangers, which is one, the only lucrative investment he ever made. he put his vixen a dozen dollars and came away with about $15 million. and this company, smart tag, which started out as a legitimate technology company soon became a republican operation. and it's all good while the republicans are conservative groups should have their websites and so forth. but this is very unusual and i saw george w. bush 43 was fair. the republican committee hosted it websites. hundreds and hundreds of conservative groups were there. again, that is all fine and well. this company, which is highly, highly partisan also overtime required in contracts that i think probably should not have gone to such a partisan company. in the me just say two. one was if you're in the white house to meet your e-mail according to the presidential records are public documents and they're supposed to be hosted on whitehouse.gov. the rose made sure his e-mails were hosted on
louis browns. and they gave bush entrÉe into his own texas rangers, which is one, the only lucrative investment he ever made. he put his vixen a dozen dollars and came away with about $15 million. and this company, smart tag, which started out as a legitimate technology company soon became a republican operation. and it's all good while the republicans are conservative groups should have their websites and so forth. but this is very unusual and i saw george w. bush 43 was fair. the republican...
138
138
Apr 21, 2012
04/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 138
favorite 0
quote 0
grips with the limits of technology and recognize, you know, there has to be, you know, maybe old geri brown when he was talking about the champing is beautiful. maybe it was a logical message. when you add the other thing that i've been talking about here it's okay to take the technological risks who's going to be the adult monitoring it. that's when it gets scary. i would argue in the cases that we've described as you can see, we can't count on the political system to do it. so that becomes the real deal breaker. yes, maybe you can build a good nuclear powerplant. maybe you can regulate it. maybe you can make it safe. are you really going to trust these guys who have the morality and ethics who is lower than the secret service agency who won't pay a prostitute her due. >> $150 he wouldn't pay! i wanted to say one thing. i think a lot of these discussions about disaster or disaster narrative and and how these things happen come down -- we're having a discussion here about what is the nature of man? is man a -- as i wrote? is a depraved human beast that tends to be what i believe. or is he o
grips with the limits of technology and recognize, you know, there has to be, you know, maybe old geri brown when he was talking about the champing is beautiful. maybe it was a logical message. when you add the other thing that i've been talking about here it's okay to take the technological risks who's going to be the adult monitoring it. that's when it gets scary. i would argue in the cases that we've described as you can see, we can't count on the political system to do it. so that becomes...
144
144
Jan 21, 2012
01/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 144
favorite 0
quote 0
because of scott brown in the midterm elections and everything else. if he is reelected, do you see continued transformation continuing to happen? on the political side of things do you think that can contribute to him being more effective publicly? he has been seen as weak compared -- do you think that transformation -- >> you are asking the right question because i think a very big question i have about this president is how creative his conception of presidential power is. we know what liberal presidential power is and he has lost some of that because of legislative and economic circumstances. so part of his challenge is to come up with a more expansive and creative and flexible sense of presidential power. that is part of why it -- this was an unexpected contrast i started developing with the first lady because the first lady doesn't have any official power because she had to be extremely creative in a way in terms of the establishing influence over the public for herself. so i can't answer for you how he is going to do that but you are asking the
because of scott brown in the midterm elections and everything else. if he is reelected, do you see continued transformation continuing to happen? on the political side of things do you think that can contribute to him being more effective publicly? he has been seen as weak compared -- do you think that transformation -- >> you are asking the right question because i think a very big question i have about this president is how creative his conception of presidential power is. we know what...
167
167
May 26, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 167
favorite 0
quote 0
>> guest: right, in the year 1954, which is a central moment, when the brown v. board of education litigation was before the high court. c-span: you found david van for an interview when you wrote this book? >> guest: yes, that's right. c-span: where did you find him? >> guest: i found him in birmingham in his law office. c-span: how old a man is he now? >> guest: i would say in his early 60s. i apologize if i'm off; if not that, then somewhere around late 50s and 60s. c-span: the only reason i was interested in it was because we do so much about the court, and this was an insight into the information about when the decision came down on brown vs. board of education. >> guest: right. david van lived at justice black's house, and he was driving him in. everybody knew at the court that the brown decision was there and being worked on, and i might add for people who are deeply interested in brown, and i cite this in my acknowledgment, you must pick up simple justice, richard kluger's book, if you really want the inside story. this was just a vignette that i picked u
>> guest: right, in the year 1954, which is a central moment, when the brown v. board of education litigation was before the high court. c-span: you found david van for an interview when you wrote this book? >> guest: yes, that's right. c-span: where did you find him? >> guest: i found him in birmingham in his law office. c-span: how old a man is he now? >> guest: i would say in his early 60s. i apologize if i'm off; if not that, then somewhere around late 50s and 60s....
97
97
Nov 3, 2012
11/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 97
favorite 0
quote 0
authors of the 1956 southern manifesto, which was the protest of the supreme court's decision in the brown v. board of education 1964. strom thurmond is the recordholder to stay at the longest one-man filibuster. 24 hours and 18 minutes he spoke against the 1957 civil rights bill. we remember strom thurmond today is one of the last of the jim crow demagogues and he was. he was not. but we forgot is that he was also one of the first of the sun belt conservatives. what i mean by that? as a sun belt, it's one of the major stories in the history of 20th century american politics. that is the flow of jobs, industry, resources and population from the states of the northeast and midwest, to the south and southwest in the post-world war ii period. southern states were recruiting industries. they were passing right to work laws. they were receiving from you and from the federal government to build military installations that attend the united states was involved in the cold war against the soviet union. states like mississippi, georgia, texas and southern california and arizona and north carolina a
authors of the 1956 southern manifesto, which was the protest of the supreme court's decision in the brown v. board of education 1964. strom thurmond is the recordholder to stay at the longest one-man filibuster. 24 hours and 18 minutes he spoke against the 1957 civil rights bill. we remember strom thurmond today is one of the last of the jim crow demagogues and he was. he was not. but we forgot is that he was also one of the first of the sun belt conservatives. what i mean by that? as a sun...
130
130
Apr 29, 2012
04/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 130
favorite 0
quote 0
about this time that the house had already passed a bill period we were waiting for senator sharad brown to return from his mother's weight. the bill contained about $300 billion in tax cuts, $200 in spending, for medicare medicaid, unemployment and food stamps, about $100 billion in education spending to save teachers jobs and infrastructure products, these include highway and road projects and long-term investments for clean energy am a broadband, electric carts, and high-speed rail. overall, it is now estimated it will cost about $840 billion. if you look at all the state programs over time, like the wpa, the manhattan project and the marshall plan to rebuild europe after world war ii, the stimulus is bigger than all of these things. when this all started, this really felt like the new deal of the 21st century. there was a lot of anticipation, i think, among reporters and the republic, at a time when we were losing 700,000 jobs a month -- we had a new president, come in and bring a soap to the country. we have just seen the bailouts of the banks, which had angered a lot of people. the
about this time that the house had already passed a bill period we were waiting for senator sharad brown to return from his mother's weight. the bill contained about $300 billion in tax cuts, $200 in spending, for medicare medicaid, unemployment and food stamps, about $100 billion in education spending to save teachers jobs and infrastructure products, these include highway and road projects and long-term investments for clean energy am a broadband, electric carts, and high-speed rail. overall,...
133
133
Dec 3, 2012
12/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 133
favorite 0
quote 0
>>guest: you can wear black, brown. we are saving the leopard. and i will probably get another pair or two. >>guest: we will have a good price on that, stay tuned. >>host: would you recommend this to anybody looking for great leggings? >>caller: of course. what is that pink color? >>guest: it is called merlot >>caller: i like that. i where these to my reggae club. --wear these to my ireggae club. jim. >>host: think he'll then decked, goodbye. we have shiny black, shiny and the platinum and that great. at a 205-242.deasy stretch, easy to care and 205-367 is your item number, we have more to get to. we are now checking in with colleen lopez and the today's special and we want to tell you how easy it is to apply for the hsn charge card. [♪ music ♪] [commercial] [commercial] [♪ music ♪] [reading] [♪ music ♪] >>host: hello everybody, how are you this but it will be afternoon and about 16 minutes prepared. if you fellleep and were not here at midnight, we have the most amazing today's special. these are half a billion years old. bees are ca
>>guest: you can wear black, brown. we are saving the leopard. and i will probably get another pair or two. >>guest: we will have a good price on that, stay tuned. >>host: would you recommend this to anybody looking for great leggings? >>caller: of course. what is that pink color? >>guest: it is called merlot >>caller: i like that. i where these to my reggae club. --wear these to my ireggae club. jim. >>host: think he'll then decked, goodbye. we have...
145
145
May 20, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 145
favorite 0
quote 0
the other attorney in brown versus board of attorney was another named thurgood marshall. who is your idol as an attorney? john w. davis. how would he try the case? that's what i tried to do. it's ironic he becomes a supreme court justice and wins that case. thank you. there's so many interesting men who, you know, so obscure. who heard of louis cass? father of mental anguish. father of michigan. he created the university of michigan, created their public school system, a great naturalist. considered america's leading expert on native americans, and he was honored, and so he was -- they are all interesting character, and it's a shame they are forgotten, and i hope if my book doesn't do anything else, but encourages people to look more at these people because they provide wonderful examples how politics should be. sometimes again, better than the winners. they are honorable men, very interesting thoughts issue and also i'd encourage you if you get the book to look at the essays baa there's other -- because there's other books i recommend to learn about the people. i enjoyed
the other attorney in brown versus board of attorney was another named thurgood marshall. who is your idol as an attorney? john w. davis. how would he try the case? that's what i tried to do. it's ironic he becomes a supreme court justice and wins that case. thank you. there's so many interesting men who, you know, so obscure. who heard of louis cass? father of mental anguish. father of michigan. he created the university of michigan, created their public school system, a great naturalist....
103
103
Nov 22, 2012
11/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 103
favorite 0
quote 0
authors of the 1956 southern manifesto, which was the protest of the supreme court decision in the brown versus board of education in 1964. he was the recordholder to this day of the longest one-man filibuster. twenty-four hours and 18 minutes he spoke against the 1957 civil rights bill. we remember him as one of the last of the jim crow demagogues. and he was one of those. what we forget about him is that he was also one of the first of the sun belt conservatives. what do i mean by that? well, it is the major story in the history of 20th century american politics. that is the flow of jobs and industries and resources and populations from the states of the northeast and the midwest to the south and the southwest in a personal period. southern states were recruiting industries and the right to work laws. they were receiving lots of funding from the federal government at a time when the united states was involved in a cold war with the soviet union. states like georgia and texas and florida and other california and north carolina were all being transformed in the post-world war ii period b
authors of the 1956 southern manifesto, which was the protest of the supreme court decision in the brown versus board of education in 1964. he was the recordholder to this day of the longest one-man filibuster. twenty-four hours and 18 minutes he spoke against the 1957 civil rights bill. we remember him as one of the last of the jim crow demagogues. and he was one of those. what we forget about him is that he was also one of the first of the sun belt conservatives. what do i mean by that? well,...
261
261
Jul 14, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 261
favorite 0
quote 0
talking about black, brown, red -- [inaudible] people from all gin. early '70s, went on to the late '70s, okay, started in the '80s, grouping for the most part was eliminated, okay? i think the problem pma w tngut ucn. unless we -- and this is my own particular point of view. unless we can talk about giving our children some form of education in terms of wt hahed nd'mot necessarily talking about dr. george washington carver or frederick douglass, but our real history, okay? [iibs egan yearsag unless we can talk about that, then we are going to be faced with situations that are constantly the way we're facing the situation right now. so i think thatre wiurhin and say this is our real history and not what you have in these books that, for the most part, are coming out of texas where tey're even talking a n oay stleivgh h. >> well, i know here in harlem, u know, i was just at wattly a couple of months ago struggling th this attempt to cse scols wn. adiat hee an announcement they're closing down 64 schools. in a chocolate city. to be replaced by either ch
talking about black, brown, red -- [inaudible] people from all gin. early '70s, went on to the late '70s, okay, started in the '80s, grouping for the most part was eliminated, okay? i think the problem pma w tngut ucn. unless we -- and this is my own particular point of view. unless we can talk about giving our children some form of education in terms of wt hahed nd'mot necessarily talking about dr. george washington carver or frederick douglass, but our real history, okay? [iibs egan yearsag...
137
137
Apr 1, 2012
04/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 137
favorite 0
quote 0
as the mcginn georgia the governor was joe browne of the confederate politics in the controversy the sun was shining he would say now what is and without looking outside the window to see if it was or not. and in et 64 there were discussions about a brown opening of the negotiations with sherman who now of course is happily marching through georgia towards some kind of a separate peace or armistice to protect georgia from what was going on the brown it didn't go the distance. it was suggested to the governor in north carolina that perhaps the same thing should be pursued best of the governors were not willing to. >> their twisting things around to the purpose actually argue that he didn't have the authority to surrender. his oath as president was to preserve to protect and defend as lincoln. so davis couldn't open the negotiations. only the individual states that had the power, the sovereignty. only they could decide the convention among themselves to sue for peace. he knew it would take years to get these people together to agree on something like that. so this stance on the one han
as the mcginn georgia the governor was joe browne of the confederate politics in the controversy the sun was shining he would say now what is and without looking outside the window to see if it was or not. and in et 64 there were discussions about a brown opening of the negotiations with sherman who now of course is happily marching through georgia towards some kind of a separate peace or armistice to protect georgia from what was going on the brown it didn't go the distance. it was suggested...
210
210
Sep 21, 2012
09/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 210
favorite 0
quote 0
the senator brown is lining up with the republicans to
the senator brown is lining up with the republicans to
157
157
Sep 1, 2012
09/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 157
favorite 0
quote 0
maybe that's not the best -- with piercing brown eyes and apple i knows, olive skin and an irrepressible sense of confidence, most of him in france for sharecroppers, farmers and who scrambled into sandy, red clay fields. they rejoice in slavery ended, but the promise of freedom had withered like spring grass steered by the summer sun. he might've even remember the chatter about a man who is giving them fair skin in basic that lips, but kept in a careful distance, never claiming publicly for quoting him with legitimacy. its office had been a slave to an enslaved teenage girl and a man whose identity he may have never known. so edolphus mr. birmingham, alabama in 1880. now we think of birmingham, alabama today is beyond one hand and ultimately the wrong materials and the most significant manufacturing industry in this country's 20th century and i'm somewhat taking the pulitzer prize-winning book of 2009. pss it's also of course an iconic for the children's crusade in 1963, but what is he able to do in birmingham and and a way that challenges what we think about this. >> he did not want to
maybe that's not the best -- with piercing brown eyes and apple i knows, olive skin and an irrepressible sense of confidence, most of him in france for sharecroppers, farmers and who scrambled into sandy, red clay fields. they rejoice in slavery ended, but the promise of freedom had withered like spring grass steered by the summer sun. he might've even remember the chatter about a man who is giving them fair skin in basic that lips, but kept in a careful distance, never claiming publicly for...
82
82
May 22, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 82
favorite 0
quote 0
brown: thank you, mr. president. last week the vice president of the united states was in my state in ohio in the youngstown area in northeast ohio and he saw what i've been seeing in my state for the last several months and he heard what i've been hearing from so many ohioans in the last several months. he went to the lordstown auto assembly plant which makes the chevy cruze and he saw what we've been seeing in my state, where manufacturing finally is coming back. from 200 to 2010, from early 2000 to january 2010, the manufacturing sector in this country lost a huge number of jobs, more than 5 million jobs. now, the -- about the 35 years before that manufacturing jobs in this country were pretty constant. they were up and down, but in 1997 oar 1998, we had about the same number of manufacturing jobs in america that we had in 1965. a smaller percent of the workforce, a smaller percent of g.d.p. perhaps, but roughly the same number of jobs. but from 2000 to january 2010, we lost some estimates were as high as one of t
brown: thank you, mr. president. last week the vice president of the united states was in my state in ohio in the youngstown area in northeast ohio and he saw what i've been seeing in my state for the last several months and he heard what i've been hearing from so many ohioans in the last several months. he went to the lordstown auto assembly plant which makes the chevy cruze and he saw what we've been seeing in my state, where manufacturing finally is coming back. from 200 to 2010, from early...
173
173
Oct 14, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 173
favorite 0
quote 0
lead authors of the 1956 southern manifesto, which is the protest of the supreme court's decision to brown v. board of education decision in 1954. strom thurmond is the recordholder to this day the longest one-man filibuster. it's in the guinness book of world records. 24 hours and 18 minutes he spoke against the 1957 civil rights bill. we remember strom thurman today as one of the last digit growth demagogues. anyways. but what we forget is that he was also one of the first of the sun belt conservatives. now what do i mean by that? now, the sun belt is one of the major stories in the history of 20th century american politics. and that is the flow of jobs, industries, resources and population from the states of the northeast and midwest to the south and southwest in the post-world war ii period. you know, something stays for recruiting industries, passing right to work laws. they were receiving lots of funding for the federal government to build military licenses at the time the united states is involved in the cold war against the soviet union. so states like mississippi, georgia and texa
lead authors of the 1956 southern manifesto, which is the protest of the supreme court's decision to brown v. board of education decision in 1954. strom thurmond is the recordholder to this day the longest one-man filibuster. it's in the guinness book of world records. 24 hours and 18 minutes he spoke against the 1957 civil rights bill. we remember strom thurman today as one of the last digit growth demagogues. anyways. but what we forget is that he was also one of the first of the sun belt...
153
153
Oct 13, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 153
favorite 0
quote 0
scott brown hadn't even been sworn in in massachusetts and scottybrown.com was already purchased but so many women had been in washington so many years as legislators working on important work and yet their names never bubble to the top and we were curious why not. >> how did you decide you wanted to write this book? you all studied similar topics. how did this book come about? >> it was my idea. i have been a political nerd, my parents remember my sister and i in 1960 staging a knicks and/kennedy debate. my elephant beat her ratify. the magazine issues came out in advance of the presidential election, preview the eight or ten or 12 people who ought to be considered and it struck me after seeing so many issues, women were not making it on that list. they were not thought to be presidential. they were thought for some reason not to be presidential. as an academic you tend to ask well, why? that was the origin of the book. women are not quickly coming into those. >> there was a conference paper. for those graduate students you can take conference papers and turn them into publications.
scott brown hadn't even been sworn in in massachusetts and scottybrown.com was already purchased but so many women had been in washington so many years as legislators working on important work and yet their names never bubble to the top and we were curious why not. >> how did you decide you wanted to write this book? you all studied similar topics. how did this book come about? >> it was my idea. i have been a political nerd, my parents remember my sister and i in 1960 staging a...
128
128
Nov 24, 2012
11/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 128
favorite 0
quote 0
his name is michael peach, and he's the publisher of little brown who is tom wolfe's publisher. if he'll stand, i would hope he could be recognized. mike? there he is. thank you, michael. [applause] >> welcome. >> thank you. and our sponsor, one of the really great sponsors that we've had for many, many years, they've been really huge supporters of the miami book fair, and that's wpbt, channel 2. and to get our program off the ground, i want to bring out the executive vice president and chief operating officer, delaware hour race sukdeo please, please, welcome her. thank you all. >> have a good evening. [applause] >> thank you, everyone, and welcome. my name is delores, i'm the coo for wpbt-2 which is your public television station. [applause] now, what i love about the miami book fair is that for me it represents how we should be known here in miami. sure, we have beautiful beaches, we've got some interesting politics. i think increasingly we'll be known for our wacky characters. but if you look to the person to your right and if you speak to the person to your left, what you w
his name is michael peach, and he's the publisher of little brown who is tom wolfe's publisher. if he'll stand, i would hope he could be recognized. mike? there he is. thank you, michael. [applause] >> welcome. >> thank you. and our sponsor, one of the really great sponsors that we've had for many, many years, they've been really huge supporters of the miami book fair, and that's wpbt, channel 2. and to get our program off the ground, i want to bring out the executive vice president...
59
59
Aug 14, 2012
08/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 59
favorite 0
quote 0
you can't wear brown shoes with a gray suit. what are you thinking? so that is the hon frigidity of my character that has worn off on me. but, the other question was about genes. no, i don't wear jeans. and i don't want to say why i don't wear jeans because that would be to offend all of the men at that do when you are over 40. [laughter] >> what person in history would you most like to portray? >> what i most like to portray? that is a great question. i don't know if i want to portray him because i don't think about that way. i would like to see him portrayed in some way and i don't know how you can dramatize. sometimes these things are the purview of literature for reason and they don't really make a great films. but as we live in the world we live in today and we live in the world that i think increasingly shaped i don't want to save recklessly, but i should say the word is mine struggling, you are all writers. help me out. a world that is being shaped kind of surreptitiously if you will by the current supreme court. i would like to see something t
you can't wear brown shoes with a gray suit. what are you thinking? so that is the hon frigidity of my character that has worn off on me. but, the other question was about genes. no, i don't wear jeans. and i don't want to say why i don't wear jeans because that would be to offend all of the men at that do when you are over 40. [laughter] >> what person in history would you most like to portray? >> what i most like to portray? that is a great question. i don't know if i want to...
125
125
May 30, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 125
favorite 0
quote 0
black and brown people. and we're talking about women of all colors, again, who have these funny names or who for some reason changed their names and don't have this i.d. this is what we need to be concerned about. and these battles again are continuing. as i said the information on our brennan center report is outdated. because things are happening consistently. you need to understand that there are legislators around this country who, unlike all of us in this room, are not necessarily as concerned about protecting democracy because i'm going to tell you, all of us who are here on the dais today, our organizations are all nonpartisan organizations. we don't care if you're blue, black, purple, yellow, or red. what we are concerned about is all americans have their right to vote protected. that is the message. so don't allow folks to try to pigeonhole this and turn this into a black issue. this is an american issue. this is a democracy issue. [applause] so i'm going to sit down now because i've given you the
black and brown people. and we're talking about women of all colors, again, who have these funny names or who for some reason changed their names and don't have this i.d. this is what we need to be concerned about. and these battles again are continuing. as i said the information on our brennan center report is outdated. because things are happening consistently. you need to understand that there are legislators around this country who, unlike all of us in this room, are not necessarily as...
112
112
Apr 7, 2012
04/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 112
favorite 0
quote 0
probably one of the most outstanding examples of that is roscoe brown. roscoe brown was a tuskegee airmen or on march 24th, 1945, blew on the berlin mission, the only one that the tuskegee ever flew on because it was usually the 8th air force from england flying those missions, but he shot down a german jet and was famous partly because of that, but also was a famous educator, and he was the one who, if you remember the 2007 ceremony in which president george w. bush presented a gold medal to the tuskegee airmen collectively for their services in world war ii and beyond and roscoe brown was the tuskegee airmen chosen to accept it on behalf of the whole that medal. i've gotten to know him over the year, and i asked him to write the introduction of the book, and he accepted. he has the introduction written in here. he's an example of a successful tuskegee airmen of being successful outside of military. >> i'm interested in the tuskegee connection. we talk about tuskegee in different eras and the institute and schools and military. can you tell us a little
probably one of the most outstanding examples of that is roscoe brown. roscoe brown was a tuskegee airmen or on march 24th, 1945, blew on the berlin mission, the only one that the tuskegee ever flew on because it was usually the 8th air force from england flying those missions, but he shot down a german jet and was famous partly because of that, but also was a famous educator, and he was the one who, if you remember the 2007 ceremony in which president george w. bush presented a gold medal to...
160
160
Feb 4, 2012
02/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 160
favorite 0
quote 0
the point in my reporting that i found her fuming was after the scott brown victory. scott brown wins. this has devastating consequences for the president's legislative agenda. is in jeopardy now. she is two issues with her husband's team. she doesn't understand how they could have let this happen, how they could have dropped the ball in the race. the other issue which is more to the heart of the presidency is she always had this idea that her husband is going to be a transformative president. she never liked politics. if you are going to go into politics you have this lofty vision of who you are going to be. the administration like the nebraska one that were very unpopular and didn't look that great and barack obama was looking like a more ordinary politician and that is what she was reacting to. that is why the partnership is so interesting. not that we are delving into the secrets of their marriage but looking at her vision of the presidency and the standards she has and whether she can meet them. >> you can watch this and other programs online at booktv.org. c-spa
the point in my reporting that i found her fuming was after the scott brown victory. scott brown wins. this has devastating consequences for the president's legislative agenda. is in jeopardy now. she is two issues with her husband's team. she doesn't understand how they could have let this happen, how they could have dropped the ball in the race. the other issue which is more to the heart of the presidency is she always had this idea that her husband is going to be a transformative president....
124
124
Oct 26, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 124
favorite 0
quote 0
brown. it was his third and final debate moderated by nbc news. >> moderator: thank you. the error may be no bigger debate in this battleground state in hamilton county where we are tonight in the studio here in cincinnati. welcome to the third and final debate between the two men vying to be one of ohio's voices in ohio. thank you to all of the nbc stations here in ohio. senator sherrod brown maintains he has the experience of fighting for ohio's best interest. and josh mandel says it's time to put the state on a new course. i promise the live audience that i would give them one chance to give the candidates some applause. there is your cue. [applause] >> moderator: been an exchange, they agree to keep the applause down until we get through our questions. both men have the opportunity to get through these questions tonight. we have a panel of questioners. we have a reporter from channel five, our nbc affiliate in cleveland has a reporter, and colombia has a candidate as well. each candidate
brown. it was his third and final debate moderated by nbc news. >> moderator: thank you. the error may be no bigger debate in this battleground state in hamilton county where we are tonight in the studio here in cincinnati. welcome to the third and final debate between the two men vying to be one of ohio's voices in ohio. thank you to all of the nbc stations here in ohio. senator sherrod brown maintains he has the experience of fighting for ohio's best interest. and josh mandel says it's...
109
109
Apr 21, 2012
04/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 109
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> [inaudible] after his defeat in 1924, and he ended up brown v. board of education in 1954. >> you have a great historicalnology. actually, there is a thing about davis in the back. what i did was i picked for chapter-length treatment, i picked the ones who i thought had done the most to influence contemporary american politics. and before i get to davis, people always say why didn't you have wendell willkie in there? some people credit him with making sure the united states was prepared for world war ii because the republicans did not want the lend lease act, for example, to go through, and roosevelt asked wily, could you go to -- willkie, would you go to britain as a staff envoy and come back and tell the american people why it's so important we give aid and comfort to britain. and the congress was about ready to end the draft about six months before pearl harbor. and the draft extension passed by two votes, again, also due to willkie. willkie changed history, but he didn't change our politic. nothing about willkie changed how our political part
. >> [inaudible] after his defeat in 1924, and he ended up brown v. board of education in 1954. >> you have a great historicalnology. actually, there is a thing about davis in the back. what i did was i picked for chapter-length treatment, i picked the ones who i thought had done the most to influence contemporary american politics. and before i get to davis, people always say why didn't you have wendell willkie in there? some people credit him with making sure the united states was...
159
159
Jan 7, 2012
01/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 159
favorite 0
quote 0
it is not specifically, i don't know, black, hispanics, brown people. no, it is muslims he does not like. that's it. and yes it was very anti-muslim. he talks how he wants the jews and buddhists and all the people of europe to join with him to fight against the islam maization of europe. that is his big thing. whether or not that is connected to the insanity on some molecular level i don't know but for "the new york times" to describe him as a christian fundamentalist was an outrageous slander. something we've come to expect from the "new york times.". >> host: in the a recent column by you on ann coulter.com "new york times" kills dozens in norway. >> guest: that is about him. i cites "the new york times" in his manifesto. >> host: pinch salzberger "new york times", without him, "slander" it could not have been written without his help. >> guest: oh that is in the acknowledgement. >> host: acknowledgement. >> guest: the book is dedicated to robert jones. >> sorry. >> guest: my headcations, i -- dedications i take seriously. but acknowledgements, they'r
it is not specifically, i don't know, black, hispanics, brown people. no, it is muslims he does not like. that's it. and yes it was very anti-muslim. he talks how he wants the jews and buddhists and all the people of europe to join with him to fight against the islam maization of europe. that is his big thing. whether or not that is connected to the insanity on some molecular level i don't know but for "the new york times" to describe him as a christian fundamentalist was an...
117
117
Nov 19, 2012
11/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 117
favorite 0
quote 0
his name is michael peach, and he's the publisher of little brown who is tom wolfe's publisher. if he'll stand, i would hope he could be recognized. mike? there he is. thank you, michael. [applause] >> welcome. >> thank you. and our sponsor, one of the really great sponsors that we've had for many, many years, they've been really huge supporters of the miami book fair, and that's wpbt, channel 2. and to get our program off the ground, i want to bring out the executive vice president and chief operating officer, delaware hour race sukdeo please, please, welcome her. thank you all. >> have a good evening. [applause] >> thank you, everyone, and welcome. my name is delores, i'm the coo for wpbt-2 which is your public television station. [applause] now, what i love about the miami book fair is that for me it represents how we should be known here in miami. sure, we have beautiful beaches, we've got some interesting politics. i think increasingly we'll be known for our wacky characters. but if you look to the person to your right and if you speak to the person to your left, what you w
his name is michael peach, and he's the publisher of little brown who is tom wolfe's publisher. if he'll stand, i would hope he could be recognized. mike? there he is. thank you, michael. [applause] >> welcome. >> thank you. and our sponsor, one of the really great sponsors that we've had for many, many years, they've been really huge supporters of the miami book fair, and that's wpbt, channel 2. and to get our program off the ground, i want to bring out the executive vice president...
112
112
Nov 9, 2012
11/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 112
favorite 0
quote 0
i mean look at scott brown. i mean, as moderate a guide and for the previous panel, they were talking about what congress needs to do to work together and where you need moderate republicans. you need moderate democrats but on the republican side, scott brown, probably would have been one of these people who could work across party lines, scott brown loses. linda -- in hawaii and moderate republican. she would have been a strong asset i think for that kind of congress that pulls things together. she was a terrific candidate and ran a great campaign but you know running in a republican in a very democratic state in the precedence home state is particularly her, it just rang up no sale. i would add heather wilson in new mexico was another one like that in so to sort of moderate republicans running in very blue states basically all lost and then look at their counterparts. look at the democratic moderates running in the red states. joe donnelly in indiana. now, sure maybe you want to get some credit to his opponent
i mean look at scott brown. i mean, as moderate a guide and for the previous panel, they were talking about what congress needs to do to work together and where you need moderate republicans. you need moderate democrats but on the republican side, scott brown, probably would have been one of these people who could work across party lines, scott brown loses. linda -- in hawaii and moderate republican. she would have been a strong asset i think for that kind of congress that pulls things...
147
147
Jan 7, 2012
01/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 147
favorite 0
quote 0
and one of his most famous speeches shortly before he's assassinated by john wilkes booth who was at brown's hanging -- so it's all these connections -- you know, lincoln gives this second inaugural address in which he talks about every drop of blood drawn by the lash will have to be repaid, you know, by blood drawn by the sword. and this is an eerie echo of brown who says before he goes to the gallows, of course, the sins of this guilty land will never be purged away but with blood. so these two figures who start off in really different positions kind of come together in the end. [applause] that it? we're all done. thank you. [applause] i don't know why i'm clapping. >> because i didn't speak and i didn't get really a window into my life, i had become kind of an evil cartoon and it didn't help myself with wearing a hat coming out of my plea in court, and thought i had become kind of a villain and i wanted to show people, i'm not an evil person. i'm a regular person. i did things that were wrong but i don't have a tailor horns. i grew up like everybody else. >> now on encore booknotes, polit
and one of his most famous speeches shortly before he's assassinated by john wilkes booth who was at brown's hanging -- so it's all these connections -- you know, lincoln gives this second inaugural address in which he talks about every drop of blood drawn by the lash will have to be repaid, you know, by blood drawn by the sword. and this is an eerie echo of brown who says before he goes to the gallows, of course, the sins of this guilty land will never be purged away but with blood. so these...
106
106
Oct 20, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 106
favorite 0
quote 0
the protest of the supreme court's decision in the brown vs. board of education decision. strom thurmond is the record holder to this day of the longest one man filibuster. 24 hours and 18 minutes. he spoke against then 1957 civil rights bill. we remember strom thurmond as one of the last of the jim crow demagogues, and he was one that. but what we forget about thurmond, he was also one of the first of the sunbelt conservatives. what do i mean by that? what's a sunbelt conserve? the sun belt is one of the big stories -- one of the major stories in the history of 20th 20th century american politics, and that is the flow of jobs, of industries, of resources, and population, from the states of the northeast and the midwest to the south and the southwest, in the post-world war ii period. southern straights were recruiting industries, passing right to work law, receiving funding from the federal government to build military installations in a time when the united states was involved in a cold war against the soviet union. states like mississippi and georgia and texas and florid
the protest of the supreme court's decision in the brown vs. board of education decision. strom thurmond is the record holder to this day of the longest one man filibuster. 24 hours and 18 minutes. he spoke against then 1957 civil rights bill. we remember strom thurmond as one of the last of the jim crow demagogues, and he was one that. but what we forget about thurmond, he was also one of the first of the sunbelt conservatives. what do i mean by that? what's a sunbelt conserve? the sun belt is...
70
70
Mar 19, 2012
03/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 70
favorite 0
quote 0
senator jack reed, senator landrieu, senator brown and i believe we can create new opportunities for growing companies without creating a wild west mentality in our capital markets. and now to outline just a few of the ways in which we seek to repair the flaws of the house bill and enable real growth and job creation. right now, mr. president, companies that need capital to grow and add jobs are allowed to sell stocks in some cases without oversight by the s.e.c. and under looser legal liability rules. but in return for that reduced oversight, the companies must sell almost exclusively to investors that meet high-income or asset thresholds that help to ensure that they are able to understand and absorb the high risk of these investments. right now companies making these largely unregulated offerings are not generally allowed to offer them to the public. the house bill will allow companies to market these unregulated stock sales known as private of course offerings to e public. they can advertise on billboards or on cold calls to senior living centers with almost no oversight. our sub
senator jack reed, senator landrieu, senator brown and i believe we can create new opportunities for growing companies without creating a wild west mentality in our capital markets. and now to outline just a few of the ways in which we seek to repair the flaws of the house bill and enable real growth and job creation. right now, mr. president, companies that need capital to grow and add jobs are allowed to sell stocks in some cases without oversight by the s.e.c. and under looser legal...
69
69
Jan 30, 2012
01/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 69
favorite 0
quote 0
brown: thank you, mr. president. i want to thank obviously ranking member collins and chairman lieberman for really doing something very unusual around here, which is to get something out in a very short period of time. having it not only come up, being filed by senator gillibrand, her bill and me with my bill, and then you both working together to move it forward for a hearing, and then that hearing going very well and coming out so quickly is unheard of. i want to thank you for that. i want to thank senator reid for bringing this bill to the floor today as well as, as i said, chairman lieberman, ranking member collins and senator gillibrand. we've worked together to draft a bipartisan version of the stock act, an act that passed homeland security and governmental affairs committee by an overwhelming margin. and that's appropriate because this is -- it isn't a partisan or ideological issue. it's about cleaning up washington. abraham lincoln spoke at gettysburg fighting to preserve government of the people, by the pe
brown: thank you, mr. president. i want to thank obviously ranking member collins and chairman lieberman for really doing something very unusual around here, which is to get something out in a very short period of time. having it not only come up, being filed by senator gillibrand, her bill and me with my bill, and then you both working together to move it forward for a hearing, and then that hearing going very well and coming out so quickly is unheard of. i want to thank you for that. i want...
35
35
Mar 14, 2012
03/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 35
favorite 0
quote 0
these issues have all been wrestled with and addressed by the bill that senator bennet, senator brown and myself have put together. now, the other sections of the house bill have similar problems. i won't speak to those problems because there is other folks who are much more knowledgeable about it, so i will stick to my section and use it as an analogy of why this entire bill should go through the banking committee. let me read to you a letter from matave. their slogan is investment for everyone. isn't that the perfect slogan for crowd funding? investment for everyone. they address their letter -- "dear senators reid and mcconnell. we are a crowd funding intermediary based in durham, north carolina. we understand the senate will take up the house bill shortly. we are very concerned about language in title 3. while we appreciate the broad exemption written by the house, the language does not protect investors and puts the crowd funding industry at risk of significant fraud. however, more responsible language does exist." and then it refers to the bill that the senate has been working o
these issues have all been wrestled with and addressed by the bill that senator bennet, senator brown and myself have put together. now, the other sections of the house bill have similar problems. i won't speak to those problems because there is other folks who are much more knowledgeable about it, so i will stick to my section and use it as an analogy of why this entire bill should go through the banking committee. let me read to you a letter from matave. their slogan is investment for...
177
177
Nov 10, 2012
11/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 177
favorite 0
quote 0
what the veterans down there called the desert, but he had spent considerable time contemplating the brown wastes around the infantry base depot. and to his continual amazement, being a man who had always thought trees and lakes and mountains important, he loved them. possibly it was their geometric barrenness. perhaps in may when conditions were drier and hotter he would not have loved them so well, the lone and level sands stretching far away. he remembered shelley's traveler from an antique land which could certainly have been egypt. there, as they neared cairo, were the three great pyramids punctuating the perfect line of the horizon like an ancient geometry lesson. still, for all its flatness, the greenness of the delta would have been -- if he could be allowed for a moment to consider the unthinkable -- an unbelievably sight to the africa corps should they ever see it. this is a good war out here in that respect he wrote home a few days later. he has a lush, green land as goal, and we have our goal; ever west which is the direction of home and the traditional american direction. he h
what the veterans down there called the desert, but he had spent considerable time contemplating the brown wastes around the infantry base depot. and to his continual amazement, being a man who had always thought trees and lakes and mountains important, he loved them. possibly it was their geometric barrenness. perhaps in may when conditions were drier and hotter he would not have loved them so well, the lone and level sands stretching far away. he remembered shelley's traveler from an antique...
58
58
Apr 25, 2012
04/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 58
favorite 0
quote 0
deep and genuine when their first child amanda was on her way, sergeant dorley declined admission to brown university and began working four jobs so he could support his new family. at this early stage in his life, sergeant dorley chose to prioritize his new family over himself and as did he so many times throughout his life he thought about others before he thought of himself. his example of hard work, four jobs to support the family, is the story of america. coming here from someplace else, working as hard as you can to build a strong family and contribute to a strong community. from helping his family pay off the notes on their cars to gathering old and used police uniforms so his fellow police officers in -- police officers in liberia, he exemplified the best of what we expect from public servants, a deep commitment to serving others for the greater good. while terribly tragic, sergeant dorley passed away doing what he knew best, helping others trying to come to the aid of fellow providence police officers, officers edward kimball and tony hampton who were trying to break up a fight. t
deep and genuine when their first child amanda was on her way, sergeant dorley declined admission to brown university and began working four jobs so he could support his new family. at this early stage in his life, sergeant dorley chose to prioritize his new family over himself and as did he so many times throughout his life he thought about others before he thought of himself. his example of hard work, four jobs to support the family, is the story of america. coming here from someplace else,...
126
126
Feb 25, 2012
02/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 126
favorite 0
quote 0
in fact, congresswoman carrie meek, congresswoman brown and congressman al c. hastings are in the fourth grade textbooks of florida when we study the state as being elected. so i'm very happy to say, also, i serve as the chairman of black history for the miami-dade county public schools. i have a whole segment of the community that is interested in making sure that everyone learns african-american history as they come through the public schools. so we meet quarterly, we give suggestions to the african-american history task force and make sure that that goal is met. so today we continue that legacy, and i want to thank keenan and all of the interns in my office for all that they have done, especially pulling this together, thanking c-span for coming out to cover us today as we move along, we expect more people o come. they have just called votes. i'm going to vote, and i only have two votes, and i will be back to enjoy this wonderful, rich session. i see our great honoree is here this morning, and let's give him a hand just as he enters the door. [applause] we'r
in fact, congresswoman carrie meek, congresswoman brown and congressman al c. hastings are in the fourth grade textbooks of florida when we study the state as being elected. so i'm very happy to say, also, i serve as the chairman of black history for the miami-dade county public schools. i have a whole segment of the community that is interested in making sure that everyone learns african-american history as they come through the public schools. so we meet quarterly, we give suggestions to the...
66
66
Oct 4, 2012
10/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 66
favorite 0
quote 0
yeah, so he graduated from brown university with a degree in urban studies and during his time at brown he worked as a youth career counselor. he was also on the governors lgbt commission and the main focus of his administration at the moment are early childhood literacy, building an economy focused around art, innovation and technology, and supporting local and community policing initiatives. as the students we are glad to have here as well, rachel stanley is a junior at elon college majoring in international studies with all sorts of minors, political science, and she has worked with refugees and her region. she is the president of halal on her campus and the millennial values fellow so we are pleased that she is back. last but not least, mohammad usman is a senior at depauw university majoring in urban policy and conflict studies with a minor in religious studies. he was a part of the national bioethics bowl, the winning team in the last year so congratulations on that. and before attending depauw was a special assistant in advocate for acts of civil legal justice at the university o
yeah, so he graduated from brown university with a degree in urban studies and during his time at brown he worked as a youth career counselor. he was also on the governors lgbt commission and the main focus of his administration at the moment are early childhood literacy, building an economy focused around art, innovation and technology, and supporting local and community policing initiatives. as the students we are glad to have here as well, rachel stanley is a junior at elon college majoring...
196
196
Aug 1, 2012
08/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 196
favorite 0
quote 0
sherrod brown, who's the incumbent senator up for reelection had a tough race and was very aggressively and advertising now in mid to late july. in the collective bad campaign coming from the chamber of commerce not from his opponent or the team but from. maybe improving voters information but certainly it's caused people to spend money they'll otherwise wouldn't have been spending at this time which means they're raising more. >> my fellow panelists seemed concerned about the anxiety. i'm not the worst. after the act was enacted in the 1970's which created a long period of stasis and our political system in which incumbents were protected by. in the system the required them to raise money in small increments without the help of constituencies, without the help of political ian angels. those walls are indeed coming down and its the al-sayyid groups bringing the walls down. .. what do we mean when we say expenditure of expenditure. we could have a healthy debate about whether we need a much clearer to pen jan of independence of coordination. at that issue's been around for a long time an
sherrod brown, who's the incumbent senator up for reelection had a tough race and was very aggressively and advertising now in mid to late july. in the collective bad campaign coming from the chamber of commerce not from his opponent or the team but from. maybe improving voters information but certainly it's caused people to spend money they'll otherwise wouldn't have been spending at this time which means they're raising more. >> my fellow panelists seemed concerned about the anxiety....
60
60
Jun 11, 2012
06/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 60
favorite 0
quote 0
brown at your exhibit g. b3 which is a list of your meetings of media between 2007-2010, on tap five of the bundle we are prepared. just so we get the flavor of this. >> it was a duty of office, if i may say so. if i have not met media owners and editors, i would be failing in my duty. we have to explain to them what was basically cute huge national issues, and the reason that calls are greater in some parts than others is because afghanistan, the economic crisis were bigger issues at the time. >> if you see the range of people you were saying, mr. brown, the telegraph on the first page, quite a few interactions within, a meaning at breakfast. i will be coming back to that. the editor of the telegraph. then some meetings quite limited with "the guardian," the times. one meeting with mr. hinton, it's a full range, really, do you agree? >> yes and i tried my best to meet everyone. i think probably, yes, i met everyone where i could. and i didn't sometimes at events that they organize but i do sometimes add even
brown at your exhibit g. b3 which is a list of your meetings of media between 2007-2010, on tap five of the bundle we are prepared. just so we get the flavor of this. >> it was a duty of office, if i may say so. if i have not met media owners and editors, i would be failing in my duty. we have to explain to them what was basically cute huge national issues, and the reason that calls are greater in some parts than others is because afghanistan, the economic crisis were bigger issues at the...
137
137
Aug 1, 2012
08/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 137
favorite 0
quote 0
senator brown. >> i thank you, senator blumenthal. there have been a member of heroes in this country, some well known, some not so well known fighting for gender equity. barbara mikulski, no one has done it longer or better than she has. i was in columbus two days ago with lilly ledbetter, someone who stepped up and because of her site, women around this country come especially lower income women are making more money than they would have otherwise and earning but they have to learn because of her affairs and i will be introducing any moment in other hero in the fight for equity for gender equity in health care for women. at about a year and a half ago i was in the hometown in toledo and renounced his people across the country announced the beginning that began the efforts through medicare on preventive care starting in early 2011, some 600,000 women in ohio, senior women in ohio began to have preventive services, mammograms, various kinds of physicals, a no co-pay, no deductible. this is the beginning. tomorrow in my state, when 8 b
senator brown. >> i thank you, senator blumenthal. there have been a member of heroes in this country, some well known, some not so well known fighting for gender equity. barbara mikulski, no one has done it longer or better than she has. i was in columbus two days ago with lilly ledbetter, someone who stepped up and because of her site, women around this country come especially lower income women are making more money than they would have otherwise and earning but they have to learn...
204
204
Jan 3, 2012
01/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 204
favorite 0
quote 0
well, the data suggest that state juvenile justice systems are targeting black and brown kids. african-american youth are 41% of our nation's population, yet they represent 69% of all children who are detained. these children experience a lot of the violence that i just spoke about. then they are released back into their communities. this is why the violence and abuse suffered by children caught up in our juvenile justice system affects us all. evidence also suggests that lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender's youth are also disproportionately hot up in a juvenile justice system. often for reasons related to their orientation. sometimes when you come out they get disconnected from their families and, therefore, are on the street. that can be dragged back into the juvenile justice system. other times these youth are defending themselves against pervasive bullying that happened in the committee and on the street. a report by the juvenile justice project in louisiana suggested these youth are very gullible to sexual abuse while in prison. in this report a number of youth talked abo
well, the data suggest that state juvenile justice systems are targeting black and brown kids. african-american youth are 41% of our nation's population, yet they represent 69% of all children who are detained. these children experience a lot of the violence that i just spoke about. then they are released back into their communities. this is why the violence and abuse suffered by children caught up in our juvenile justice system affects us all. evidence also suggests that lesbian, gay,...
88
88
Feb 2, 2012
02/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 88
favorite 0
quote 0
andrews said partner at mayer brown with clients on a host of financial services in his testifying today on the half of united states chamber of commerce. mr. michael gerhardt's director for the center at the university of north carolina school of law. mr. david rifkin is department and cochairs appellate practice and served as justice permit firm at the white house and cochairs appellate practice and served it just is firm at the white house in the george h. debbie bush administrations. mark firm at the white house in the george h. debbie bush administrations. mark carter is partner where he advises clients on labor and employment lot. mr. carter of experience litigating before the national labor relations board pursuant to committee rules, all would they fix that members of congress will be sworn in before they testify, so i ask you to please rise and lift your right he is. do you solemnly swear or affirm the testimony about the truth, whole truth and nothing but the truth? to record reflect all witnesses answered in the affirmative. we are pleased to recognize you for your opening sta
andrews said partner at mayer brown with clients on a host of financial services in his testifying today on the half of united states chamber of commerce. mr. michael gerhardt's director for the center at the university of north carolina school of law. mr. david rifkin is department and cochairs appellate practice and served as justice permit firm at the white house and cochairs appellate practice and served it just is firm at the white house in the george h. debbie bush administrations. mark...
155
155
Aug 17, 2012
08/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 155
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> chairman brown, ranking member corker and other members of the subcommittee thank you for having me here. my name is jennifer mishory and i am the deputy director. young invisibles is a nonprofit organization that seeks to represent the interest of 18 to 34-year-olds making sure that her perspective is heard in our decisions about a collective future of being made. this spring we released a report detailing the experiences of high debt or worse with private student loans. the report analyzes subset of an on line survey of about 13,000 borrowers. additionally young individuals completed a 40 city national -- our interaction with young people make it clear. borrowers are struggling, students are confused and as a private loan market rate emerges students need more guidance and protection. as as been detailed already away to the pipeline market has shifted significantly in the past 10 years. more predatory lending led to significant increases in in the prerecession private market. after the credit market dried up the lending standards tightened in the market merged and consolidated.
. >> chairman brown, ranking member corker and other members of the subcommittee thank you for having me here. my name is jennifer mishory and i am the deputy director. young invisibles is a nonprofit organization that seeks to represent the interest of 18 to 34-year-olds making sure that her perspective is heard in our decisions about a collective future of being made. this spring we released a report detailing the experiences of high debt or worse with private student loans. the report...